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Space Age Recordings

  • Spacemen 3 'Dreamweapon' - Cargo Records UK

    Space Age Recordings

    Spacemen 3 'Dreamweapon'

    £11.99

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    Space Age Recordings

    Spacemen 3 'Dreamweapon'

    £11.99

    Now presented in a shrink-wrapped 6 panel fold out card wallet on CD, on heavyweight double vinyl in a gatefold sleeve. Digitally re-mastered by John Rivers at Woodbine Studios, November 2017 August 1988, Spacemen 3 embark on one of the strangest events in the band's already strange history.

    Billed as "An Evening of Contemporary Sitar Music" (although consciously omitting the sitar), the group would play in the foyer of Watermans Arts Centre in Brentford, Middlesex to a largely unsuspecting and unsympathetic audience waiting to take their seats for Wim Wenders' film Wings of Desire'. Spacemen 3's proceeding set, forty-five minutes of repetitive drone-like guitar riffs, could be seen as the "Sweet Sister Ray" of '80s Britain.

    Their signature sound is at once recognizable and disorienting - pointing as much to the hypnotic minimalism of La Monte Young as to a future shoegaze constituency.

    On this double LP reissue, Dreamweapon is augmented by studio sessions and rehearsal tapes from 1987 that would lead up to the recording of Spacemen 3's classic Playing With Fire'album. Spacemen Jam,'featuring Sonic Boom and Jason Pierce on dual guitar, is a side-long mediation on delicate textures and psychedelic effects.

    TRACKLISTING:
    CD:
    1. An Evening Of Contemporary Sitar Music (44.20)
    2. Ecstasy Live Intro Theme (9.00)
    3. Ecstasy In Slow Motion (9.23)
    4. Spacemen Jam (15.42)

    2xLP:
    Side A:
    1. An Evening Of contemporary Sitar Music (22.00)

    Side B:
    2. An Evening Of Contemporary Sitar Music (22.05)

    Side C:
    3. Ecstasy Live Intro Theme (9.00)
    4. Ecstasy In Slow Motion (9.23)

    Side D:
    5. Spacemen Jam (15.42)

    Release Date: 23/02/2018
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  • Spacemen 3 'Taking Drugs To Make Music To Take Drugs To'

    Space Age Recordings

    Spacemen 3 'Taking Drugs To Make Music To Take Drugs To'

    £11.99

    Double LP on heavyweight 180 gram audiophile black vinyl in a wide spined sleeve with new artwork layout. Re-mastered by John Rivers at Woodbine Studios especially for vinyl release. Includes a bonus track not on the CD version and new artwork design.

    Never has a record been so aptly titled, or so perfectly descriptive of a band's particular vision of the universe. For all that, the original appearance of Taking Drugs was in fact a bootleg on the semi-legendary/semi-notorious Father Yod imprint in 1990, later supplemented with contemporary outtakes and cuts for the Bomp reissue in 1994 and one further song for the Space Age version in 2000.

    The original seven tracks, dated January 1986 and the first recordings to feature Pete Bain on bass, are collectively known as the Northampton Demos, understandably named for the recording location in a studio outside said English city.

    Both Sonic and Pierce have been on record as long preferring these takes to the eventual versions that surfaced for the most part on Sound of Confusion. Certainly it's a fine set of performances, showing a definite step toward the more familiar sound of the group and away from the rougher takes on For All the Fucked Up Children of the World.

    "The Sound of Confusion," aka "Walkin' With Jesus," rips along with fierce energy, Pierce's singing and the rampaging, primitive wail and rumble of the band just wonderful. "Losing Touch With My Mind" takes things to an even higher level, a huge wallop of feedback and beat (Natty Brooker's drumming in particular delivers just what the doctor ordered), Pierce delivering the lines with a flat, cutting drawl.

    On the slightly lighter tip, "Come Down Easy" is more or less fully in place (aside from singing about it being 1986!), possessing a more upfront but less vocally distinct feel than the Perfect Prescription take. The tracks that surfaced on the later reissues come from a variety of different sessions, including the original take on "Feel So Good" and a good live version of "Things'll Never Be the Same," one of several cuts featuring Brooker's drumming replacement Rosco.

    Tracklisting:
    1. The Sound Of Confusion
    2. 2.35 (Version 1)
    3. Losing Touch With My Mind
    4. Amen
    5. That's Just Fine (Vocal Version)
    6. Come Down Easy
    7. Mary Anne
    8. Feel So Good
    9. 2.35 (Feedback Version)
    10. Hey Man
    11. It's Allright
    12. 2.35 (Version 2)
    13. Things'll Never Be The Same
    14. Transparent Radiation (Organ Version)
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